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A Contextual Framework For Standards

Explore the challenges and solutions of implementing open standards in the context of e-government. Learn how to address tensions, extend existing models, and assess risks.

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A Contextual Framework For Standards

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  1. http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/e-government-2006-05/http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/e-government-2006-05/ A Contextual Framework For Standards Co-Authors Alastair Dunning, AHDS Lawrie Phipps, JISC Sebastian Rahtz, OSS Watch Paul Hollins, CETIS Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath, UK Email B.Kelly@ukoln.ac.uk The authors are all active in JISC-funded work and in providing advice on best practices at a national level UKOLN is supported by: This work is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 licence (but note caveat)

  2. Contents • About the speaker • Open standards are great … but don't always work • Addressing the tensions – a contextual approach • Using the model • Extending the model • Risk assessment approach • Conclusions

  3. About The Speaker Background • Brian Kelly: • UK Web Focus – an advisory post to advise UK's HE/FE and cultural heritage sectors on Web standards & best practices • Based at UKOLN, a national; centre of expertise for digital information management • Located at the University of Bath, UK • Funded by JISC and MLA • Key work areas: • Use of standards in JISC's development programmes • Advice on accessibility • …

  4. Open Standards Are Great  … • JISC's development programmes: • Traditionally based on use of open standards to: • Support interoperability • Maximise accessibility • Avoid vendor lock-in • Provide architectural integrity • Help ensure long-term preservation • History in UK HE development work: • eLib Standards document (v1 – 1996, v2 – 1998) • DNER Standards document (2001) • which influenced: • NOF-digi Technical Standards • .. Open Standards

  5. … But Don't Always Work  • There's a need for flexibility: • Learning the lesson from OSI networking protocols • Today: • Is the Web (for example) becoming over-complex • "Web service considered harmful" • The lowercase semantic web / Microformats • Lighter-weight alternatives being developed • Responses from the commercial world Open Standards • Other key issues • What is an open standard? • What are the resource implications of using them? • Sometimes proprietary solutions work (and users like them). Is it politically incorrect to mention this!?

  6. UKOLN's "What Are Open Standards?" briefing paper refers to characteristics of open standards: • Neutral organisation which 'owns' standard & responsible for roadmap • Open involvement in standards-making process • Access to standard freely available • … Note these characteristics do not apply equally to all standards bodies e.g. costs of BSI standards; W3C membership requirements; … What is An Open Standard? • Which of the following are open standards? • XHTML 1  PDF  Flash • Java  MS Word  RSS (1.0/2.0) Open Standards

  7. Compliance Issues Compliance • What does must mean? • You must comply with HTML standards • What if I don't? • What if nobody does? • What if I use PDF? • You must clear rights on all resources you digitise • You must provide properly audited accounts • What if I don't? JISC 5/99 programme ~80% of project home pages were not HTML compliant There is a need to clarify the meaning of mustand for an understandable, realistic and reasonable compliance regime

  8. Is RSS An Open Standard? RSS Example • Is RSS an open standard ("are RSSs open standards")? RSS 1.0 (RDF Site Summary) • XML application using RDF model • Developed by Aaron Schwarz RSS 2.0 (Really Simple Syndication) • XML application using simpler model • Developed by Davey Winer • Note that RSS is a widely used and popular application; with usage growing through its key role in Podcasts • Issues: • Are these open standards? • Are they reliable and robust enough to build mission-critical services on? • Is there a clear roadmap for the future?

  9. RSS – Governance Issues RSS Example • Governance Issues: • RSS 1.0 specification maintained by Aaron Schwartz: "Aaron Swartz is a teenage writer, hacker, and activist. He was a finalist for the ArsDigita Prize for excellence in building non-commercial web sites at the age of 13. At 14 he co-authored the RSS 1.0 specification, now used by thousands of sites to notify their readers of updates." • RSS 2.0 specification developed by Dave Winer: "Winer is known as one of the more polarizing figures in the blogging community. … However .. there are many people and organizations who seem unable to maintain a good working relationship with Dave."

  10. RSS 1.0 – Roadmap Issues RSS Example • RSS 1.1: • In Jan 2005 RSS 1.1 draft released: "[we] expressed our mutual frustrations with 1.0 …, we decided that rather than lauch (sic) ... another … diatribe against the quality of the RSS 1.0 spec, … [we would] simply write a new specification ourselves. " • But it is no longer being developed: • Draft technically good (addressed ambiguities & interoperability flaws) but political reaction apathetic • RSS 2.0 has (a) better acronym and (b) momentum (through Podcasting) • And RSS 2.0 sounds newer • RSS 3.0 (joke?) proposal has caused confusionand arguments on Slashdot and elsewhere

  11. RSS 2.0 – Roadmap Issues RSS Example • RSS 2.0: • Spec published by Harvard Law School with a Creative Commons licence • RSS-Board YahooGroups used for governance body • Many arguments (most recently on proposal to expand board in April 2006): "Winer has now decided that the board doesn't exist and never had authority over the RSS specification, even though it has published six revisions from July 2003 to the present. I don't agree, but now that the board's fully public, we're in a position to make his wish a reality." Note Wikipedia has useful links to the history and politics of RSS

  12. RSS – Summary RSS Example • What can be learnt: • We thought RSS was a great lightweight syndication technology • It was – but competing alternatives were developed • No clear winner (RSS 1.0's extensibility & W3C's support versus RSS 2.0's simplicity and take-up in Podcasting, iTunes, etc) • Conclusions • Life can be complex, even with simple standards • Technical merit is never enough – market acceptance can change things • RSS can still be useful, and interoperability can be provided by RSS libraries supporting multiple formats

  13. The Context • There will be a context to use of standards: • The intended use: • Mainstream  Innovative / research • Key middleware component  Small-scale deliverable • Organisational culture: • HE vs FE  Teaching vs Research • Service vs Development  … • Available Funding & Resources: • Significant funding & training to use new standards • Minimal funding - current skills should be used • … Contextual Issues An open standards culture is being developed, which is supportive of use of open standards, but which recognises the complexities and can avoid mistakes made in the past

  14. Quality Assurance External factors: institutional, cultural, legal, … Context: Policies Prog. n Funding Research Sector … Annotated Standards Catalogue Purpose Governance … Maturity Risks The Layered Standards Model Owner JISC 3rdParties Context: Compliance JISC / project External Self assessment Penalties Learning JISC's layered standards model, developed by UKOLN. Note that one size doesn't always fit all

  15. Development Programme Report Advisers Committees JISC Manager Programme Team Contract Programme XX Call / Contract Proposals must comply with XYZ standard Proposals should seek to comply with XYZ Proposals should describe approach to XYZ Report must be in MS Word / … and use JISC template … Projects audited to ensure compliance with … Projects should develop self-assessment QA procedures and submit findings to JISC Projects should submit proposed approach for approval/information Implementation • How might this approach be used in practice? Contextual Model

  16. The Standards Catalogue • The information provided aims to be simple and succinct (but document will still be large when printed!) • Standard: Dublin Core • About the Standard: Dublin Core is a metadata standard made up … • Version: New terms are regularly added to … • Maturity: Dublin Core has its origins in workshops held … • Risk Assessment: Dublin Core plays a key role …. It is an important standard within the context of JISC development programmes. • Further Information: • DCMI, <http://dublincore.org/> • … • Author: Pete Johnston, UKOLN • Contributor: • Date Created: 04 Oct 2005 • Update History: Initial version. Example Note that as the standards catalogue is intended for wide use the contents will need to be fairly general Note recent feedback has identified the need for heading on usage in other programmes (i.e. political acceptance)

  17. E-Framework Standards … Context SupportInfrastructure QAFramework Policies User Experiences Compliance Funder'sExperiences Standards Catalogue Process Feedback • There's a need for developing and enhancing the standards catalogue in order to: • Update with new standards • Learn from feedback and experiences Review Standards

  18. Sustainability • How do we • Sustain, maintain & grow the standards catalogue? • Develop a sustainable support infrastructure? • Suggestions: • More resources for support infrastructure • Extend model to related areas to gain buy-in, etc • Exploit learning gained by projects, reuse experiences, encourage sharing, etc.: • Build on QA Focus approach (briefing docs and case studies) • Contractual requirement for projects to produce end-user deliverables and deliverables related to development process Sustainability

  19. Extending The Model • Joint UKOLN / TechDis / OSS Watch work has extended the layered model to other related areas* Context: Policies Sector Funding Culture Resources … Annotated Catalogues Standards Software Accessibility … Context: Compliance External Self assessment Learning … • This model aims to provide a consistent & understandable model: • For use by the funders and for use by projects • Applicable to the diversity to be found in the sector • Applicable to the technical complexity and diversity • Potentially applicable outside UK sector * Application to accessibility described at W4A 2006

  20. Support Infrastructure (1) Support • Opportunity to exploit deliverables from JISC-funded QA Focus project: • 90+ briefing documents & 30+ case studies • Licensed (where possible) under Creative Commons • UKOLN are continuing to publish new documents (documents on Folksonomies, AJAX, Podcasting, Wikis, etc. published recently) • Case Study Template • About the Project • Area covered • Approach taken • Lessons Learnt / Things We'd Do Differently • … • Case studies: • Opportunity to describe experiences in specific areas • Standard template to ensure consistency & provide focus • Allows UKOLN to promote projects' work  • Project get better Google rating 

  21. Support Infrastructure (2) Support • How others can contribute (projects & third parties) • Case Studies • On way home use template to summarise one aspect of your development work and send to me • Briefing Documents • Write a (brief!) briefing paper on area not currently covered and send to me • Why? • Others (e.g. me) can cite your work • Use of a CC licence enables you, your work, your organisation, … to become known in other sectors – you can benefit from this • You will be seen to be good Web citizens • You may get the 'feel good' factor – it's not just open source software developers who can share their work • You can benefit from our work .. so it would be good if we can benefit from yours

  22. Support Infrastructure (3) Support • How do we integrate the standards catalogue with implementation experiences, etc. • Linking to related information in Wikipedia (the world can help the updating) • Uploading information to Wikipedia – the wider community can help to update and maintain it • Making information available with CC licences – so others can use it, update it – and hopefully give feedback on enhancements • Use of syndication technologies (RSS & OPML) • Note this is a Web 2.0 approach: • Uses Web 2.0 syndication technologies • Trusts users and benefits from a wide user base • Contributes to Web 2.0 services

  23. Syndicating Content • Note importance of: (a) RSS and OPML (b) modular approach and (c) Creative Commons licence to maximise use & reuse of 90+ briefing documents

  24. Risk Assessment Model Future Work • SS=f(SB, S, U, En, ..) • Selection of appropriate standard (SS) is function of: Standards Body (SB): Maturity, stability, status, openness, responsivity, … Standard (S): Functionality, complexity / ease-of-use, … Users (U): Appropriateness for, benefits to adoption by … Environment (En): Institutional, community, sectoral, … • Other factors: • Market acceptance: do vendors support it (beyond proof-of-concept open source examples) • Risks (am I betting the company of the standard) • Exit options (can I easily change my mind) • Advocacy (is the world campaigning for it) and threats (is the world criticising for it)

  25. Using Risk Assessment Model Future Work • Using model, what conclusions would you arrive at for: • GIF vs PNG? Former has patented algorithm; latter is open and better – but does inertia rule (and limitations in browser support for PNG? • PDF vs HTML/CSS? Latter is open and better for reuse but publishing processes prefer control provided by latter (cf this workshop) • PowerPoint vs HTML/CSS (e.g. S5) or SMIL? Former is ubiquitous; easier for authors and gives better handouts • Semantic Web vs semantic web vs status quo? Promises much, but complex vs simpler approach using existing technologies vs people may be happy with status quo and organisation reluctant to take risks

  26. Conclusions • To conclude: • Open standards is important and use should be encouraged, esp, in public sectors • Because of importance, there is a need for a pragmatic approach and not hide behind dogma • The contextual approach: • Allows scope to address complexities of technologies; deployment environments; etc. • Best deployed within a supportive open standards culture • Can be extended to other relevant areas • We can use Creative Commons for open access to standards information; support materials; etc. which can help sustainability • A risk assessment approach can help avoid mistakes in adopting risky open standards Conclusions

  27. Questions • Any questions? Note resources cited in the talk & accompanying paper are bookmarked in del.icio.us using tag ''e-government-2006-kelly"

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